State v. Hay

859 P.2d 1, 221 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 1993 Utah LEXIS 118, 1993 WL 333582
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 1993
Docket900457
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 859 P.2d 1 (State v. Hay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hay, 859 P.2d 1, 221 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 1993 Utah LEXIS 118, 1993 WL 333582 (Utah 1993).

Opinion

HALL, Chief Justice:

Defendant Terry L. Hay appeals from a conviction of criminal homicide, murder in the second degree, a first degree felony in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-203. We affirm.

On July 27, 1989, Hay and Lony Crosby went to Wales, Utah, to work and stay with Crosby’s grandparents. On the afternoon of August 1, 1989, Hay and Crosby packed and went up into the mountains to hunt and camp. Later that afternoon, Crosby’s grandfather heard two gunshots fired in rapid succession coming from the nearby mountains. Approximately one hour later, Hay returned alone to the Crosbys’ home. Crosby’s grandmother asked Hay where Crosby was, and he responded that Crosby was still up in the mountains preparing their dinner. Hay then collected his belongings and left, indicating that he was returning to the mountains to meet Crosby. Crosby’s grandparents saw neither Crosby nor Hay again.

Hay returned to Salt Lake City, where on the night of August 1, 1989, he met with Crosby’s girlfriend, Jennifer Bratt. When Bratt asked Hay about Crosby’s whereabouts, Hay told her that while in the mountains, Crosby had hit him over the head with a rock, taken the guns and knives they had with them, and left. Hay speculated that Crosby had gone to Reno, Nevada, to see an ex-girlfriend. At trial, Bratt stated that while Hay appeared dirty at the time, she saw no sign of injury.

On August 2, 1989, Hay again spoke with Bratt. He indicated that he had spoken with Crosby and that Crosby had in fact hitchhiked to Reno. On that same day, Hay spoke with a friend, Travis Pearce, who inquired as to Crosby’s whereabouts. Hay told Pearce that he had been camping with Crosby and that while he was sleeping, Crosby stole $30 and a .22 rifle from him and that when he awoke, Crosby was gone. Hay also told Pearce that he thought Crosby was on his way to Wisconsin.

Hay spoke with Crosby’s mother, Lois Crosby, on August 2, 1989. Hay told Mrs. Crosby that while camping, Crosby began talking about hitchhiking to Wisconsin. Later that afternoon, Hay told Mrs. Crosby that Crosby had been seen the night before saying goodbye to some people. That evening, Hay again spoke with Mrs. Crosby. He told her that while camping, he took a *3 nap and when he awoke, Crosby was gone. Hay also indicated that he and Crosby had a fight. Later in the evening of August 2, 1989, at Crosby’s father’s request, Salt Lake County Deputy Sheriff Paul Reich met with Hay. Hay repeated his story that he had taken a nap and when he awoke, Crosby was gone. When Reich indicated that Hay’s story did not make sense, Hay became emotional and said that he had promised that he would not reveal Crosby’s whereabouts but that Crosby had run away to Reno to get a job. Hay also told Reich that he and Crosby had stolen a truck in Wales to return to Salt Lake City.

On approximately August 4, 1989, Crosby’s family filed a missing person report. Over the next several months, Hay continued to represent to others that he had been in contact with Crosby. Sometime after Crosby’s disappearance, Hay and Bratt began to date seriously. Certain evidence revealed that Hay had a romantic interest in Bratt before Crosby’s disappearance and that Hay had indicated to Bratt that he wished she would not date Crosby.

On December 31, 1989, two hunters found a decomposed body, later identified as Crosby’s, near Utah Lake. An autopsy revealed that Crosby had been shot twice in the back of the head, probably while lying face down. The autopsy also uncovered a fracture above the eyebrow área that appeared to be the result of a severe blow to the head with a blunt object. The medical examiner concluded that Crosby’s death was a homicide caused by two gunshots to the head.

Once Crosby’s body had been discovered and identified, Hay was brought in for questioning. When inconsistencies in his story were called into question, Hay confessed that he was responsible for Crosby’s death. He first claimed that upon returning from Wales, he and Crosby decided to camp in a field near the home of Crosby’s parents in Murray, Utah. Hay further related that they got into an argument over Bratt and that when Crosby came at him with a knife, he grabbed his rifle and pointed it at Crosby and it discharged. Hay said that he was not exactly sure how the shooting occurred or where Crosby had been shot, but he admitted taking Crosby’s body and dumping it near Utah Lake.

When questioned by Murray City Detective Jeff Anderson, Hay provided much the same story, maintaining that the shooting took place in Murray. He added that they had been drinking while camping in the field and that when they began talking about Bratt, Crosby became upset, grabbed his knife, and said to Hay, “I’m gonna kill you.” Hay said that when Crosby came at him with the knife, he grabbed the .22 rifle to scare Crosby. Crosby swung the knife at Hay, which caused Crosby to spin around and stumble. Hay said that the rifle then discharged accidentally because his fingers were shaking. He guessed that the rifle was fired two or three times and remembered Crosby’s body falling motionless to the ground. Hay claimed that he was frightened and wanted to hide Crosby’s body and run away. He told Detective Anderson that after dumping Crosby’s body near Utah Lake, he returned to Murray and threw Crosby’s other belongings, including the knife with which Crosby allegedly threatened Hay, in a nearby creek. Hay described the knife as having a long blade and a black and red handle.

Notwithstanding Hay’s varied versions of "the shooting incident, there was evidence that the homicide took place in Wales. The investigation in Wales uncovered the spot where it was believed Crosby and Hay camped and a cowboy boot similar to the one found with Crosby’s body. Two .22 casings, a knife, and a shallow hole covered with broken branches were found nearby.

Hay was charged with the murder, and at trial, for the first time, he confessed that the shooting actually took place in Wales while he and Crosby were in the mountains. Hay testified that the two had taken knives and his .22 rifle with them into the mountains to hunt rabbits. Consistent with his earlier contentions, Hay testified that the two were discussing Bratt when Crosby grabbed a knife and came at him, threatening to kill him. Hay further testified that he picked up his rifle to scare *4 Crosby and make him back off. When Crosby swung the knife at Hay, he spun and began to fall and the gun went off. At trial, Hay claimed that the gun discharged only once. He testified that he did not know what to do but called to Crosby while he was lying on the ground and Crosby did not move. Hay left Crosby’s body on a sleeping bag in the pit Crosby had dug to cook their dinner and covered him with dirt. He stated that he “didn’t want to see [Crosby’s body]” and that he did not know where Crosby had been shot or see the wounds or blood in the back of Crosby’s head.

Hay said he threw the black-and-red-handled knife near the campsite and gathered up the rest of their belongings. He remembered leaving the mountains and stealing a truck that he drove to Salt Lake City. Hay claimed that he had fabricated the earlier stories and had lied to Crosby’s family and friends because he wanted to believe that Crosby was not dead and that he was just out of town.

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Bluebook (online)
859 P.2d 1, 221 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 1993 Utah LEXIS 118, 1993 WL 333582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hay-utah-1993.